US3122006A - Refrigerating apparatus including cabinet structure - Google Patents

Refrigerating apparatus including cabinet structure Download PDF

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US3122006A
US3122006A US197326A US19732662A US3122006A US 3122006 A US3122006 A US 3122006A US 197326 A US197326 A US 197326A US 19732662 A US19732662 A US 19732662A US 3122006 A US3122006 A US 3122006A
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cabinet
walls
refrigerant
chamber
passages
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US197326A
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James W Jacobs
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Motors Liquidation Co
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Motors Liquidation Co
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25DREFRIGERATORS; COLD ROOMS; ICE-BOXES; COOLING OR FREEZING APPARATUS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F25D23/00General constructional features
    • F25D23/06Walls
    • F25D23/061Walls with conduit means
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25DREFRIGERATORS; COLD ROOMS; ICE-BOXES; COOLING OR FREEZING APPARATUS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F25D11/00Self-contained movable devices, e.g. domestic refrigerators
    • F25D11/04Self-contained movable devices, e.g. domestic refrigerators specially adapted for storing deep-frozen articles
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25BREFRIGERATION MACHINES, PLANTS OR SYSTEMS; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS
    • F25B2339/00Details of evaporators; Details of condensers
    • F25B2339/04Details of condensers
    • F25B2339/043Condensers made by assembling plate-like or laminated elements
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25DREFRIGERATORS; COLD ROOMS; ICE-BOXES; COOLING OR FREEZING APPARATUS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F25D2400/00General features of, or devices for refrigerators, cold rooms, ice-boxes, or for cooling or freezing apparatus not covered by any other subclass
    • F25D2400/10Refrigerator top-coolers

Definitions

  • An object of my invention is to provide a novel and simple refrigerator cabinet of low manufacturing costs having a refrigerating system incorporated in the construction of the cabinet whereby the necessity of separately mounting some individual elements of the system therein is eliminated.
  • Another object of my invention is to construct a combined refrigerator cabinet and refrigerating system from a prefabricated pressure welded substantially fiat plate member having refrigerant passages formed in portions thereof which member is multibent and folded to define outer walls of the cabinet and a plurality of walls of a food storage chamber therein with the passages in certain portions of the member providing a refrigerant evaporator in the system extending along walls of the chamber and exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same and with the passages in certain other portions of the member providing a refrigerant condenser in the system extending along a cabinet outer wall and exposed to air ambient thereto.
  • FIGURE 1 is a front View of a refrigerating apparatus including a top opening freezer or frozen food storage refrigerator cabinet constructed in accordance with my invention showing a portion of the cabinet broken away to illustrate a machine compartment therein;
  • FIGURE 2 is an enlarged vertical sectional view of the refrigerating apparatus taken on the line 22 of FIG- URE 1;
  • FIGURE 3 is a plan view of the present prefabricated pressure welded plate member with refrigerant passages formed therein trimmed and readied to be bent and folded for the purpose herein disclosed;
  • FIGURE 4 is a broken top view of the plate member enlarged over FIGURE 3 with certain portions of the member bent or folded to provide walls of the chamber of the cabinet structure;
  • FIGURE 5 is a broken vertical sectional view taken on the line 5-5 of FIGURE 4 showing other portions of the plate member yet to be bent and folded;
  • FIGURE 6 is a top view of the plate member with other portions thereof bent and folded to provide a double walled box-like structure
  • FIGURE 7 is a vertical sectional view taken on the line 77 of FIGURE 6 of the box-like structure with insulation disposed between double walls thereof.
  • FIGURES 1 and 2 show in FIGURES 1 and 2 thereof a refrigerating apparatus including a horizontally elongated top opening chest-type refrigerator cabinet It comprising a plurality of walls defining a freezing or frozen food storage chamber 11 and a machine or the like compartment 12 beneath the food chamber.
  • the open top of cabinet it is normally closed by an insulated door structure 14 iingedly mounted on the cabinet in any suitable or conventional manner for vertical swinging movement relative thereto.
  • At least Walls bounding chamber 11 have insulating material 16 disposed therebetween as is conventional in the art.
  • the interior of food chamber 11 may contain shelves or slidable baskets, bins or the like for storage of frozen foods therein or for foods to be frozen in the chamber.
  • a refrigerating system is associated with cabinet lb and comprises, in accordance with my invention, refrigerant flow passages formed in portions of a prefabricated pressure welded flat plat member which is bent and folded with edges of folds thereof secured together to provide the double Walled box-like cabinet structure as will be hereinafter more fully described.
  • the refrigerating system incorporated in cabinet 10 includes refrigerant evaporating passages in several walls of food chamber 11 exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same and refrigerant condensing passages in several outer walls of the cabinet exposed to air ambient thereto.
  • the refrigerating system also includes an electrically energizable motor drivingly connected to a refrigerant compressor both enclosed in a casing and forming a sealed motor-compressor unit 20.
  • Unit 20 is mounted within compartment 12 upon a bracket or the like support 21 secured in any suitable or conventional manner to walls of cabinet 10. Short noninsulated end walls of compartment 12 may be louvered or perforated for permitting heat generated by unit 20 to escape from this compartment.
  • the compressor of unit 20 has refrigerant inlet and discharge conduits or pipe connections 23 and 24 (see FIGURE 2) with refrigerant passages formed in the pressure welded plate member utilized in constructing walls of cabinet 10 connecting the unit, through a wall of compartment 12, to the refrigerant condensing and refrigerant evaporating passages of the refrigerating systern in closed series flow relationship with one another.
  • Refrigerator cabinet 14B is of a well-known character and is disclosed merely to illustrate the present invention and should not be restrictive to a type or design cabinet to which same is applicable.
  • FIGURE 3 of the drawings A prefabricated roll pressure welded one-piece substantially flat plate-like member herein utilized to provide the cabinet 10 and elements of the refrigerating system incorporated therein is shown in FIGURE 3 of the drawings.
  • a plate member may be formed in accordance with the teachings in the G. R. Long Patent No. 2,662,273 dated December 15, 1953 and the C. H. Wurtz et a1.
  • Patent No. 2,712,736 dated July 12, 1955 and is now well known to those familiar with the art.
  • the plate member comprises two aluminum alloy sheets which are superimposed upon each other after coating or applying to an inner face of one of them a predetermined pattern of stop weld material for preventing uniting of the sheets therealong during pressure welding thereof.
  • the thickness of the sheets is reduced and they are welded together along contacting surfaces at all points except where the sheets have been precoated with the stop weld material to provide a composite homogenous member.
  • the internal unbonded patterns or portions in the homogenous plate member, formed by the stop weld material, are then pressure separated or dilated in at least one direction to form passages therein with walls of the passages bulged preferably outwardly from only one face thereof.
  • the pressure welded plate member 25 is trimmed or cut to a specified size and configuration as shown therein to provide a plurality of tabs 26 at edges of certain portions thereof and is slit on short lines indicated by the reference numerals 27.
  • Passages 28 formed in member 25 provide a refrigerant condenser element and passages 29 provide a refrigerant evaporator element for a refrigerating system. It is to be noted that the end of one set of passages 28 and 29 is separated by a cut-out part 31 of plate member 25 and that a separate capillary tube 32 is brazed into the open ends of passages 28 and 29 thereat which tube provides a refrigerant restrictor or expanding element for the refrigerating system.
  • a plurality of dot-dash lines are extended across plate member 25 in FIGURE 3 and indicate points at which portions thereof are bent and folded, as will be hereinafter described, to construct the box-like cabinet structure it Before proceeding with a description of the bending, folding and securing together of various portions of pressure welded plate member 25 it is desired, in order to better understand the multifolding operations or steps, to explain that the portions thereof indicated at 36, 37, 38, 39 and 41 are intended to define or provide walls of food chamber 11 of cabinet 10.
  • Portions thereof indicated at 42, 43, 44 and 46 are intended to define or provide outer walls of cabinet 10 spaced from the walls of chamber 11 and portions 47, 48 and 49 of the plate member are intended to provide the top and long side walls of machine compartment 12 of the cabinet. Due to the large size of plate member 25 necessary to construct the cabinet of the present disclosure refrigerant passages in portions of this member are not shown in FIGURES 4 to 7 inclusive of the drawings for sake of clarity in describing the multifolding stages or steps. Plate member 25 is bent along lines D, C, B and A into the rectangular box form shown in FIGURE 4 of the drawings with portion 37 folded to form a bottom wall for chamber 11 and with portions 36 and 38 folded to form upright long sides of chamber 11.
  • Wing portions 39 and 41 are bent along lines M and folded in another direction, with respect to the folding of portions 36, 37 and 38 to provide upright end walls of chamber 11 with portion 33 paralleling but spaced from portion 42 (see FIGURE).
  • the edge parts of portions or walls 39 and 41 adjacent and along lines A and B outwardly beyond slits 27 are folded over, on lines A and B, to overlap and are secured, by aluminum brazing as at 51, to corner edges of portions or walls 36 and 38 (see FIGURE 4).
  • Refrigerant evaporating passages 29 of the refrigerating system associated with cabinet are, by the bending and folding operations just described, located in bottom wall 37 and in the two upright long Walls 36 and 38 of chamber 11.
  • Plate member is further bent along the lines E, F, G, H, I and J and folded with portions 42 and 43 thereof defining the outer long side walls of cabinet 10 and with wing portions 44 and 46 bent along lines K and folded at a right angle with respect to portion 42 to provide the outer ends of the cabinet (see FIGURE 6).
  • FIG- URE 7 of the drawings the bent and folded portions 48, 47 and 49 of plate member 25 are shown as defining the top and upright long inner side walls respectively of machine compartment 12.
  • the edge parts of portions 44 and 46, extending from portion 42, adjacent and along line E outwardly beyond slits 27 are folded over, on line B, to overlap and are secured, also by aluminum brazing as at 52, to corner edges of portion or wall 43 (see FIG- URE 6).
  • FIGURE 7 of the drawings With portions or walls of cabinet 10 formed and secured together as disclosed in FIGURE 7 of the drawings the space between inner and outer walls thereof is now to be filled with the insulating material 16.
  • the insulating material may be discharged into spaces between inner and outer walls of cabinet 10 to expand therein and be permitted to set whereby the insulation bonds these walls together to provide a rigid box-like structure of great structural strength.
  • a lightweight, structurally strong plastic insulating material such, for example, as polyurethane which is now well known to those skilled in the insulation art.
  • tabs 26 at the top of portions of the box-like structure or on top of edges of walls 36, 39, 41, 43, 44 and 46 are bent over upon one another, along lines N, and brazed together.
  • tabs 26 may, if desired, be insulated from one another and secured to each other by nonmetallic screws or fasteners.
  • the tabs 26 provide securing points about the top of cabinet 10 for screws or the like which mount a cover or molded plastic collar 53 (see FIGURES 1 and 2) thereon adapted to be engaged by a gasket 54 on door 14 for sealing the access opening of food storage chamber 11.
  • Combined gusset plate and glider elements are secured to bottom corners of cabinet 10 to support same on a floor or the like.
  • Mounting bracket 21 carrying motor-compressor unit 20 thereon is secured in any suitable or conventional manner to inner leg portions 47 and 49 of machine compartment 12 of cabinet 10.
  • conduits 23 and 24 are connected to the casing of unit 20, containing the refrigerant compressor, and to one end 56 of condenser passage 28 and to one end 57 of evaporator passage 29 respectively (see FIGURES 2 and 3) to complete the refrigerating system associated with or incorporated in the unitary box-like cabinet construction 10.
  • Any desirable thermostatic switch means (not shown) as is conventional in the art may be employed to control starting and stopping of the electric motor in unit 20 to drive the refrigerant compressor therein.
  • unit 20 causes refrigerant to evaporate in evaporator passages 29 within the bottom 37 and the two long upright walls 36 and 38 of chamber 11 exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same.
  • the evaporated refrigerant is withdrawn from passages 29, by way of connection 57 and conduit 24, compressed by the compressor and forwarded, through conduit 23 and connection 56, to the refrigerant condensing passages 28 in two outer long upright walls 42 and 43 of cabinet 10.
  • Condenser passages 28 are exposed to air ambient the cabinet which air cools and liquefies refrigerant in the passages whereby liquid refrigerant is directed through restrictor tube 32 back into the evaporator 29 in a series flow circuit.
  • Exterior wall surfaces of cabinet 10 may be anodized and colored or they may be treated and then coated with paint or enamel.
  • said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages within said cabinet walls defining member,
  • said plate member being bent and folded along predetermined lines with edges of the fold secured together to provide a rigid double-walled box-like structure defining a plurality of adjacent Walls of a food storage chamber therein and a plurality of outer walls of said structure spaced from and bounding walls of said chamber,
  • said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit having conduit connections with refrigerant passages in said cabinet wall defining member,
  • said chamber having an access opening in a wall of said cabinet normally closed by a door
  • said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages within said cabinet wall defining member,
  • (/1) means interposed between and communicating with said condenser and said evaporator for restrictively directing refrigerant from the condenser into the evaporator
  • said plate member being bent and folded along predetermined lines with edges of the folds secured together to provide a bottom, upright long side and upright end walls of a rectilinear food storage chamber, walls of a machine compartment below said chamber in the cabinet and outer side and end walls of said cabinet spaced from and bounding walls of said chamber, at least two of the outer side walls being opposed,
  • said refrigerating system including a motor-cornpressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages Within said cabinet wall defining member,

Description

Feb. 25, 1964 J. w. JACOBS REFRIGERATING APPARATUS INCLUDING CABINET STRUCTURE 3 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed May 24, 1962 INVENTOR. James M. Jacobs H16 ArTORNEV Feb. 25, 1964 J. W. JACOBS REFRIGERATING APPARATUS INCLUDING CABINET STRUCTURE Filed May 24, 1962 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR.
I James (J Jacobs Feb. 25, 1964 J. w. JACOBS 3,122,006
REFRIGERATING APPARATUS INCLUDING CABINET STRUCTURE Filed May 24, 1962 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 j fl/ INVENTOR. Ja mes (4 Jacobs H15 .47 ORNEY United States Patent Ofi ice 3,122,006 Patented Feb. 25, 1964 3,122,006 REFRIGERATING APPARATUS lNiCLUDlNG CABINET STRUCTURE larnes W. Jacobs, Dayton, Gino, assignor to General Motors Corporation, Detroit, Mich, a corporation of Delaware Filed May 24, 1962, Ser. No. 197,326 4 Claims. (Cl. 62-4-53) This invention relates to refrigeration and particularly to a unitary refrigerating apparatus including a cabinet and a refrigerating system associated therewith.
Roll pressure bonded or welded sheet meal heat exchangers for refrigerating systems are now well known and the advent of such renders it possible or feasible to inspire further innovations utilizing this idea. I am aware of the fact that others have provided several versions of this principle in order to simplify construction of refrigerators and parts of a refrigerating system associated therewith. However, I propose an improvement in the art whereby a single pressure welded plate member is employed to construct substantially all walls of a refrigerator cabinet and a complete refrigerating system therein both forming integer components of the cabinet structure.
An object of my invention is to provide a novel and simple refrigerator cabinet of low manufacturing costs having a refrigerating system incorporated in the construction of the cabinet whereby the necessity of separately mounting some individual elements of the system therein is eliminated.
Another object of my invention is to construct a combined refrigerator cabinet and refrigerating system from a prefabricated pressure welded substantially fiat plate member having refrigerant passages formed in portions thereof which member is multibent and folded to define outer walls of the cabinet and a plurality of walls of a food storage chamber therein with the passages in certain portions of the member providing a refrigerant evaporator in the system extending along walls of the chamber and exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same and with the passages in certain other portions of the member providing a refrigerant condenser in the system extending along a cabinet outer wall and exposed to air ambient thereto.
In carrying out the foregoing objects it is a further object of my invention to bend and fold a single pressure welded plate member with edges of the folds secured together to define a double walled box-like cabinet structure defining walls of a food storage chamber, walls of a machine compartment therein in the cabinet within which an element of a refrigerating system is mounted and outer walls of the cabinet and to foam insulation between the double walls of the structure for bonding them together to thereby increase the structural strength of the cabinet construction.
Further objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description, reference being had to the accompanying drawings wherein a preferred embodiment of the present invention is clearly shown.
In the drawings:
FIGURE 1 is a front View of a refrigerating apparatus including a top opening freezer or frozen food storage refrigerator cabinet constructed in accordance with my invention showing a portion of the cabinet broken away to illustrate a machine compartment therein;
FIGURE 2 is an enlarged vertical sectional view of the refrigerating apparatus taken on the line 22 of FIG- URE 1;
FIGURE 3 is a plan view of the present prefabricated pressure welded plate member with refrigerant passages formed therein trimmed and readied to be bent and folded for the purpose herein disclosed;
FIGURE 4 is a broken top view of the plate member enlarged over FIGURE 3 with certain portions of the member bent or folded to provide walls of the chamber of the cabinet structure;
FIGURE 5 is a broken vertical sectional view taken on the line 5-5 of FIGURE 4 showing other portions of the plate member yet to be bent and folded;
FIGURE 6 is a top view of the plate member with other portions thereof bent and folded to provide a double walled box-like structure; and
FIGURE 7 is a vertical sectional view taken on the line 77 of FIGURE 6 of the box-like structure with insulation disposed between double walls thereof.
Referring to the drawings, for illustrating my invention, I show in FIGURES 1 and 2 thereof a refrigerating apparatus including a horizontally elongated top opening chest-type refrigerator cabinet It comprising a plurality of walls defining a freezing or frozen food storage chamber 11 and a machine or the like compartment 12 beneath the food chamber. The open top of cabinet it is normally closed by an insulated door structure 14 iingedly mounted on the cabinet in any suitable or conventional manner for vertical swinging movement relative thereto. At least Walls bounding chamber 11 have insulating material 16 disposed therebetween as is conventional in the art. The interior of food chamber 11 may contain shelves or slidable baskets, bins or the like for storage of frozen foods therein or for foods to be frozen in the chamber. A refrigerating system is associated with cabinet lb and comprises, in accordance with my invention, refrigerant flow passages formed in portions of a prefabricated pressure welded flat plat member which is bent and folded with edges of folds thereof secured together to provide the double Walled box-like cabinet structure as will be hereinafter more fully described. The refrigerating system incorporated in cabinet 10 includes refrigerant evaporating passages in several walls of food chamber 11 exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same and refrigerant condensing passages in several outer walls of the cabinet exposed to air ambient thereto. The refrigerating system also includes an electrically energizable motor drivingly connected to a refrigerant compressor both enclosed in a casing and forming a sealed motor-compressor unit 20. Unit 20 is mounted within compartment 12 upon a bracket or the like support 21 secured in any suitable or conventional manner to walls of cabinet 10. Short noninsulated end walls of compartment 12 may be louvered or perforated for permitting heat generated by unit 20 to escape from this compartment. The compressor of unit 20 has refrigerant inlet and discharge conduits or pipe connections 23 and 24 (see FIGURE 2) with refrigerant passages formed in the pressure welded plate member utilized in constructing walls of cabinet 10 connecting the unit, through a wall of compartment 12, to the refrigerant condensing and refrigerant evaporating passages of the refrigerating systern in closed series flow relationship with one another. Refrigerator cabinet 14B is of a well-known character and is disclosed merely to illustrate the present invention and should not be restrictive to a type or design cabinet to which same is applicable.
A prefabricated roll pressure welded one-piece substantially flat plate-like member herein utilized to provide the cabinet 10 and elements of the refrigerating system incorporated therein is shown in FIGURE 3 of the drawings. Such a plate member may be formed in accordance with the teachings in the G. R. Long Patent No. 2,662,273 dated December 15, 1953 and the C. H. Wurtz et a1. Patent No. 2,712,736 dated July 12, 1955 and is now well known to those familiar with the art. The plate member comprises two aluminum alloy sheets which are superimposed upon each other after coating or applying to an inner face of one of them a predetermined pattern of stop weld material for preventing uniting of the sheets therealong during pressure welding thereof. The thickness of the sheets is reduced and they are welded together along contacting surfaces at all points except where the sheets have been precoated with the stop weld material to provide a composite homogenous member. The internal unbonded patterns or portions in the homogenous plate member, formed by the stop weld material, are then pressure separated or dilated in at least one direction to form passages therein with walls of the passages bulged preferably outwardly from only one face thereof. Referring now to FIGURE 3, the pressure welded plate member 25 is trimmed or cut to a specified size and configuration as shown therein to provide a plurality of tabs 26 at edges of certain portions thereof and is slit on short lines indicated by the reference numerals 27. Passages 28 formed in member 25 provide a refrigerant condenser element and passages 29 provide a refrigerant evaporator element for a refrigerating system. It is to be noted that the end of one set of passages 28 and 29 is separated by a cut-out part 31 of plate member 25 and that a separate capillary tube 32 is brazed into the open ends of passages 28 and 29 thereat which tube provides a refrigerant restrictor or expanding element for the refrigerating system. A plurality of dot-dash lines, particularly lines identified at A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M and N, are extended across plate member 25 in FIGURE 3 and indicate points at which portions thereof are bent and folded, as will be hereinafter described, to construct the box-like cabinet structure it Before proceeding with a description of the bending, folding and securing together of various portions of pressure welded plate member 25 it is desired, in order to better understand the multifolding operations or steps, to explain that the portions thereof indicated at 36, 37, 38, 39 and 41 are intended to define or provide walls of food chamber 11 of cabinet 10. Portions thereof indicated at 42, 43, 44 and 46 are intended to define or provide outer walls of cabinet 10 spaced from the walls of chamber 11 and portions 47, 48 and 49 of the plate member are intended to provide the top and long side walls of machine compartment 12 of the cabinet. Due to the large size of plate member 25 necessary to construct the cabinet of the present disclosure refrigerant passages in portions of this member are not shown in FIGURES 4 to 7 inclusive of the drawings for sake of clarity in describing the multifolding stages or steps. Plate member 25 is bent along lines D, C, B and A into the rectangular box form shown in FIGURE 4 of the drawings with portion 37 folded to form a bottom wall for chamber 11 and with portions 36 and 38 folded to form upright long sides of chamber 11. Wing portions 39 and 41 are bent along lines M and folded in another direction, with respect to the folding of portions 36, 37 and 38 to provide upright end walls of chamber 11 with portion 33 paralleling but spaced from portion 42 (see FIGURE The edge parts of portions or walls 39 and 41 adjacent and along lines A and B outwardly beyond slits 27 are folded over, on lines A and B, to overlap and are secured, by aluminum brazing as at 51, to corner edges of portions or walls 36 and 38 (see FIGURE 4). Refrigerant evaporating passages 29 of the refrigerating system associated with cabinet are, by the bending and folding operations just described, located in bottom wall 37 and in the two upright long Walls 36 and 38 of chamber 11. Plate member is further bent along the lines E, F, G, H, I and J and folded with portions 42 and 43 thereof defining the outer long side walls of cabinet 10 and with wing portions 44 and 46 bent along lines K and folded at a right angle with respect to portion 42 to provide the outer ends of the cabinet (see FIGURE 6). In FIG- URE 7 of the drawings the bent and folded portions 48, 47 and 49 of plate member 25 are shown as defining the top and upright long inner side walls respectively of machine compartment 12. The edge parts of portions 44 and 46, extending from portion 42, adjacent and along line E outwardly beyond slits 27 are folded over, on line B, to overlap and are secured, also by aluminum brazing as at 52, to corner edges of portion or wall 43 (see FIG- URE 6). It is to be understood that the sequence in which portions of plate member 25 are bent and folded along the plurality of fold lines may, insofar as the present invention is concerned, be varied to suit conditions in the bending and folding operations so long as the double walled box-like cabinet structure, as shown in FIGURE 7, is provided with the desired inner and outer spaced-apart walls.
With portions or walls of cabinet 10 formed and secured together as disclosed in FIGURE 7 of the drawings the space between inner and outer walls thereof is now to be filled with the insulating material 16. The insulating material may be discharged into spaces between inner and outer walls of cabinet 10 to expand therein and be permitted to set whereby the insulation bonds these walls together to provide a rigid box-like structure of great structural strength. It is desired to utilize a lightweight, structurally strong plastic insulating material such, for example, as polyurethane which is now well known to those skilled in the insulation art. After the insulating material 16 has been foamed into place, tabs 26 at the top of portions of the box-like structure or on top of edges of walls 36, 39, 41, 43, 44 and 46 are bent over upon one another, along lines N, and brazed together. In order to reduce conduction between different wall portions of the cabinet structure tabs 26 may, if desired, be insulated from one another and secured to each other by nonmetallic screws or fasteners. The tabs 26 provide securing points about the top of cabinet 10 for screws or the like which mount a cover or molded plastic collar 53 (see FIGURES 1 and 2) thereon adapted to be engaged by a gasket 54 on door 14 for sealing the access opening of food storage chamber 11. Combined gusset plate and glider elements are secured to bottom corners of cabinet 10 to support same on a floor or the like. Mounting bracket 21 carrying motor-compressor unit 20 thereon is secured in any suitable or conventional manner to inner leg portions 47 and 49 of machine compartment 12 of cabinet 10. Thereafter conduits 23 and 24 are connected to the casing of unit 20, containing the refrigerant compressor, and to one end 56 of condenser passage 28 and to one end 57 of evaporator passage 29 respectively (see FIGURES 2 and 3) to complete the refrigerating system associated with or incorporated in the unitary box-like cabinet construction 10. Any desirable thermostatic switch means (not shown) as is conventional in the art may be employed to control starting and stopping of the electric motor in unit 20 to drive the refrigerant compressor therein. Operation of unit 20 causes refrigerant to evaporate in evaporator passages 29 within the bottom 37 and the two long upright walls 36 and 38 of chamber 11 exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same. The evaporated refrigerant is withdrawn from passages 29, by way of connection 57 and conduit 24, compressed by the compressor and forwarded, through conduit 23 and connection 56, to the refrigerant condensing passages 28 in two outer long upright walls 42 and 43 of cabinet 10. Condenser passages 28 are exposed to air ambient the cabinet which air cools and liquefies refrigerant in the passages whereby liquid refrigerant is directed through restrictor tube 32 back into the evaporator 29 in a series flow circuit. Exterior wall surfaces of cabinet 10 may be anodized and colored or they may be treated and then coated with paint or enamel.
It should, from the foregoing, be apparent that I have made an improvement in the refrigeration art by providing from a single pressure welded plate member a unitary refrigerator cabinet and a plurality of elements of a refrigerating system incorporated in the cabinet. The bending and folding of various portions of the plate member as disclosed provides a refrigerant evaporator in several adjacent walls of a food chamber of the cabinet to insure a cooling capacity for the chamber which is suificient to maintain a below-freezing temperature therein. After fashioning the cabinet structure in accordance with the present multifolding innovation there are a minimum of mechanical connections remaining to complete the closed refrigerating system associated with the cabinet. By the arrangement herein disclosed component elements of a unitary structure are manufactured at low cost thus reducing the retail price of same to the public. My invention is to be distinguished from prior structures wherein a pressure welded plate member of a refrigerating system is formed to provide elements thereof removably attached to a separate cabinet construction.
While the embodiment of the present invention as herein disclosed constitutes a preferred form, it is to be understood that other forms might be adopted.
What is claimed is as follows:
1. In combination, a cabinet and a refrigerating system associated therewith, said refrigerating system comprismg:
(a) a prefabricated pressure welded substantially flat plate-like member having refrigerant passages formed in portions thereof,
(b) said member being bent and folded along predetermined lines to define a plurality of adjacent walls of a food storage chamber, Walls of a machine compartment beyond said chamber in the cabinet and outer walls of said cabinet spaced from the chamber walls,
() insulating material disposed in the space between said chamber walls and said cabinet outer walls,
(d) said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages within said cabinet walls defining member,
(2) the passages in certain portions of said member providing a refrigerant evaporator in said system extending along adjacent walls of said food chamber exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same,
(f) the passages in certain other portions of said member providing a refrigerant condenser in said system extending along at least one cabinet outer wall exposed to air ambient the cabinet,
(g) means interposed between and communicating with said condenser and said evaporator for restrictively directing refrigerant from the condenser into the evaporator, and
(11) said conduit connections connecting the cornpressor of said unit, said condenser and said evaporator in closed series refrigerant flow relationship.
2. In combination, a cabinet and a refrigerating system associated therewith, said refrigerating system comprismg:
(a) a prefabricated pressure welded substantially fiat plate member having refrigerant passages formed in portions thereof,
(b) said plate member being bent and folded along predetermined lines with edges of the fold secured together to provide a rigid double-walled box-like structure defining a plurality of adjacent Walls of a food storage chamber therein and a plurality of outer walls of said structure spaced from and bounding walls of said chamber,
(c) insulating material foamed and set in the space between said inner and said outer walls of said boxlike structure to bond them to one another for increasing the structural strength of said cabinet,
(c!) said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit having conduit connections with refrigerant passages in said cabinet wall defining member,
(e) the passages in certain portions of said member providing a refrigerant evaporator in said system extending along adjacent inner walls of said food cham ber exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same,
(1) the passages in certain other portions of said mem ber providing a refrigerant condenser in said system extending along at least one cabinet outer wall exposed to air ambient the cabinet,
(g) means interposed between and communicating with said condenser and said evaporator for restrictively directing refrigerant from the condenser nto the evaporator, and
(It) said conduit connections connecting the compressor of said unit, said condenser and said evaporator in closed series refrigerant flow relationship.
3. In combination, a cabinet and a refrigerating system associated therewith, said refrigerating system comprismg:
(a) a prefabricated pressure welded substantially flat plate member having refrigerant passages formed in portions thereof,
(b) said plate member being bent and folded along predetermined lines with edges of the folds secured together to provide a bottom and upright walls of a rectilinear food storage chamber, walls of a machine compartment beyond said chamber in the cabinet and outer walls of said cabinet spaced from and bounding walls of said chamber,
(0) said chamber having an access opening in a wall of said cabinet normally closed by a door,
(d) insulating material foamed and set in the space between at least said walls of the food chamber and outer walls of the cabinet for increasing the structural strength of said cabinet,
(e) said refrigerating system including a motor-compressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages within said cabinet wall defining member,
(f) the passages in certain portions of said member providing a refrigerant evaporator in said system extending along the bottom and two upright walls of said rectilinear food chamber exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same,
(g) the passages in certain other portions of said member providing a refrigerant condenser in said system extending along a cabinet upright outer wall exposed to air ambient the cabinet,
(/1) means interposed between and communicating with said condenser and said evaporator for restrictively directing refrigerant from the condenser into the evaporator, and
(i) said conduit connections connecting the compressor of said unit, said condenser and said evaporator in closed series refrigerant flow relationship.
4. In combination, a cabinet and a refrigerating system associated therewith, said refrigerating system comprismg:
(a) a prefabricated pressure welded substantially flat plate member having refrigerant passages for-med in portions thereof,
(b) said plate member being bent and folded along predetermined lines with edges of the folds secured together to provide a bottom, upright long side and upright end walls of a rectilinear food storage chamber, walls of a machine compartment below said chamber in the cabinet and outer side and end walls of said cabinet spaced from and bounding walls of said chamber, at least two of the outer side walls being opposed,
(c) said chamber having an access opening in the top of said cabinet normally closed by a door,
(d) insulating material foamed and set in the space between at least said walls of the food chamber and outer walls of the cabinet for increasing the structural strength of said cabinet,
(c) said refrigerating system including a motor-cornpressor unit mounted in said machine compartment and having conduit connections with refrigerant passages Within said cabinet wall defining member,
(1) the passages in certain portions of said member providing a refrigerant evaporator in said system extending along said bottom and said long upright side walls of the rectilinear food chamber exposed to the interior thereof for cooling same,
(g) the passages in certain other portions of said member providing a refrigerant condenser in said system extending along two opposed cabinet upright outer side walls exposed to air ambient the cabinet,
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,031,254 Der July 18, 1931. 2,654,231 Eichhorn Oct. 6, 1953 2,966,781 Schaefer Jan. 3, 1961

Claims (1)

1. IN COMBINATION, A CABINET AND A REFRIGERATING SYSTEM ASSOCIATED THEREWITH, SAID REFRIGERATING SYSTEM COMPRISING: (A) A PREFABRICATED PRESSURE WELDED SUBSTANTIALLY FLAT PLATE-LIKE MEMBER HAVING REFRIGERANT PASSAGES FORMED IN PORTIONS THEREOF, (B) SAID MEMBER BEING BENT AND FOLDED ALONG PREDETERMINED LINES TO DEFINE A PLURALITY OF ADJACENT WALLS OF A FOOD STORAGE CHAMBER, WALLS OF A MACHINE COMPARTMENT BEYOND SAID CHAMBER IN THE CABINET AND OUTER WALLS OF SAID CABINET SPACED FROM THE CHAMBER WALLS, (C) INSULATING MATERIAL DISPOSED IN THE SPACE BETWEEN SAID CHAMBER WALLS AND SAID CABINET OUTER WALLS, (D) SAID REFRIGERATING SYSTEM INCLUDING A MOTOR-COMPRESSOR UNIT MOUNTED IN SAID MACHINE COMPARTMENT AND HAVING CONDUIT CONNECTIONS WITH REFRIGERANT PASSAGES WITHIN SAID CABINET WALLS DEFINING MEMBER, (E) THE PASSAGES IN CERTAIN PORTIONS OF SAID MEMBER PROVIDING A REFRIGERANT EVAPORATOR IN SAID SYSTEM EXTENDING ALONG ADJACENT WALLS OF SAID FOOD CHAMBER EXPOSED TO THE INTERIOR THEREOF FOR COOLING SAME, (F) THE PASSAGES IN CERTAIN OTHER PORTIONS OF SAID MEMBER PROVIDING A REFRIGERANT CONDENSER IN SAID SYSTEM EXTENDING ALONG AT LEAST ONE CABINET OUTER WALL EXPOSED TO AIR AMBIENT THE CABINET, (G) MEANS INTERPOSED BETWEEN AND COMMUNICATING WITH SAID CONDENSER AND SAID EVAPORATOR FOR RESTRICTIVELY DIRECTING REFRIGERANT FROM THE CONDENSER INTO THE EVAPORATOR, AND (H) SAID CONDUIT CONNECTIONS CONNECTING THE COMPRESSOR OF SAID UNIT, SAID CONDENSER AND SAID EVAPORATOR IN CLOSED SERIES REFRIGERANT FLOW RELATIONSHIP.
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Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3902332A (en) * 1974-02-22 1975-09-02 Environmental Container Corp Refrigerating systems
FR2373761A1 (en) * 1976-12-09 1978-07-07 Gen Electric REFRIGERATOR CABINET AND MANUFACTURING PROCESS
FR2500602A1 (en) * 1981-02-26 1982-08-27 Lemasson Jean Pierre Water to water heat pump - has compressor, evaporator and condenser mounted concentrically to reduce volume
FR2542074A1 (en) * 1983-03-02 1984-09-07 Bonnet Ets Heat-exchange panels and heat-exchange appliances comprising such panels
EP0121591A1 (en) * 1983-03-08 1984-10-17 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-GmbH Cooling or freezing apparatus
EP0230595A1 (en) * 1985-12-20 1987-08-05 NUOVA ZORSOL S.r.l. Coffin cooling unit
US6006541A (en) * 1993-06-07 1999-12-28 Taylor; Christopher Refrigeration efficiency improvement by reducing the difference between temperatures of heat rejection and heat absorption
WO2017198641A1 (en) * 2016-05-18 2017-11-23 BSH Hausgeräte GmbH Refrigerator device and method for manufacturing same

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2031254A (en) * 1931-07-18 1936-02-18 Aluminum Co Of America Heat insulated food package
US2654231A (en) * 1950-07-15 1953-10-06 Int Harvester Co Refrigerating coil mounting in cabinet
US2966781A (en) * 1956-03-05 1961-01-03 Philco Corp Refrigeration apparatus and methods of manufacturing the same

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2031254A (en) * 1931-07-18 1936-02-18 Aluminum Co Of America Heat insulated food package
US2654231A (en) * 1950-07-15 1953-10-06 Int Harvester Co Refrigerating coil mounting in cabinet
US2966781A (en) * 1956-03-05 1961-01-03 Philco Corp Refrigeration apparatus and methods of manufacturing the same

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3902332A (en) * 1974-02-22 1975-09-02 Environmental Container Corp Refrigerating systems
FR2373761A1 (en) * 1976-12-09 1978-07-07 Gen Electric REFRIGERATOR CABINET AND MANUFACTURING PROCESS
FR2500602A1 (en) * 1981-02-26 1982-08-27 Lemasson Jean Pierre Water to water heat pump - has compressor, evaporator and condenser mounted concentrically to reduce volume
FR2542074A1 (en) * 1983-03-02 1984-09-07 Bonnet Ets Heat-exchange panels and heat-exchange appliances comprising such panels
EP0121591A1 (en) * 1983-03-08 1984-10-17 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-GmbH Cooling or freezing apparatus
EP0230595A1 (en) * 1985-12-20 1987-08-05 NUOVA ZORSOL S.r.l. Coffin cooling unit
US6006541A (en) * 1993-06-07 1999-12-28 Taylor; Christopher Refrigeration efficiency improvement by reducing the difference between temperatures of heat rejection and heat absorption
WO2017198641A1 (en) * 2016-05-18 2017-11-23 BSH Hausgeräte GmbH Refrigerator device and method for manufacturing same

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